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The Conversation Nobody Wants to Have
Mental Health: The Biggest Health Crisis of Our Time, and Why We Are Still Pretending It Is Not
By Belldiva Editorial • 2026 • 20 min read
The conversation nobody wants to have, but everyone needs to.
He sat in his truck in the driveway for forty-five minutes before coming inside. Every night. For three years. Nobody knew. He called it ‘decompressing.’ His wife called it ‘distance.’ His doctor never asked. And he never said a word.
A Crisis We Refuse to Name
That man could be your father, your brother, your husband, your son. And that woman crying in the bathroom at 2am, pulling herself together, packing lunches, getting dressed, pretending everything is fine. She could be your mother, your sister, your best friend. You.
Mental health is not a fringe topic. Weakness has nothing to do with it. Rather, this is the single most widespread, most devastating, most underdiscussed health crisis on the face of this earth, and it does not only happen to other people.
And yet, in boardrooms and barbershops, at dinner tables and doctors’ offices, we still whisper about it like it is something shameful. However, there is nothing shameful about it. Being human means struggling sometimes, and it is long past time we said so loudly, clearly, and without apology.
Every man who was told to ‘man up.’
Any woman told she was ‘too emotional.’
Young people who never had the words.
Seniors told their generation doesn’t believe in ‘that stuff.’
Anyone who has ever suffered in silence because the world made them feel like their pain was inconvenient.
Your pain is not inconvenient, it is real.
And it is long past time the world started treating it that way.
Part One: The Scale of the Crisis
Mental illness is the most common form of illness on the planet, yet treated as though it belongs in a separate, lesser category.
A Crisis Hidden in Plain Sight
Despite its scale, mental illness continues to be treated as though it belongs in a different category from ‘real’ health problems like cancer, diabetes, or heart disease. The numbers are almost impossible to absorb. But try.
people worldwide will experience a mental health condition in their lifetime
people globally are currently living with depression
people die by suicide every year, one person every 40 seconds
of mental health conditions begin before age 24
of people with mental illness ever receive treatment
of global health budgets are directed toward mental health
Indeed, one person every forty seconds is not a statistic: that is someone’s child, someone’s partner, someone’s parent, someone’s friend. And for every person who loses their life to mental illness, there are hundreds more surviving it without help, without support, without even the language to describe what they are going through.
In addition, depression ranks among the leading causes of disability worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. Anxiety disorders affect hundreds of millions more. PTSD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, eating disorders, substance use disorders; collectively, these conditions represent a burden on human life that dwarfs many of the diseases we pour billions of dollars into researching.
We are not taking this seriously. Not nearly seriously enough.
Why We Don’t Talk About It
The reasons people stay silent are not mysterious. They are the same ones, over and over:
Part Two: Men and Mental Health: The Dangerous Silence
Millions of men are living inside a cage built from the language they were handed as children.
‘Man up.’ ‘Boys don’t cry.’ ‘Stop being so sensitive.’ ‘Provide. Protect. Don’t complain.’ These are not just phrases. They are a cage. And millions of men are living inside it.
Specifically, the mental health crisis among men is one of the most urgent, most underacknowledged public health emergencies of our time. In fact, men are three to four times more likely to die by suicide than women in most Western countries, accounting for approximately 75 to 80 percent of all suicide deaths in Canada and the United States. Moreover, suicide is the single biggest killer of men under 50 in the United Kingdom.
Not cancer, not heart disease.
Suicide.
The signs of men’s mental distress are often invisible, because we have been taught to look for the wrong ones.
The Help-Seeking Gap
Despite the scale of the crisis, men remain significantly less likely to seek help, less likely to talk to a doctor, confide in a friend, or call a crisis line. This is not because men don’t suffer. Rather, it is because we have spent generations telling them that suffering is weakness.
What Masculinity Costs
Traditional masculinity is built on a foundation of emotional suppression. As a result, the unspoken rules are clear: don’t cry, don’t ask for help, handle things. This is not a criticism of men; it is, rather, a criticism of a system that has failed men catastrophically.
Consequently, when a man loses his job, he does not just lose an income: he loses his identity, because society told him his worth is tied to his productivity. Similarly, when he goes through a divorce, the death of a parent, or the loss of a child, everyone expects him to be ‘the rock.’ To hold everyone else up. To keep it together.
Men’s mental distress often does not look like what we see in the movies, not sadness and tears, but irritability and anger, withdrawing from family, drinking too much, working 80-hour weeks, being the man who is ‘always tired.’ None of these are character flaws. They are symptoms. And healthcare providers are missing them daily, because everyone is looking for the wrong signs.
What Men Need to Hear
Men who talk about their feelings or seek therapy are weak.
Men who seek help show exactly the kind of self-awareness and courage that makes them better fathers, partners, leaders, and friends. Suppression does not build strength; it builds pressure that eventually breaks.
Part Three: Women and Mental Health: The Weight They Were Never Meant to Carry Alone
She is the first one awake and the last one to sleep. And when she finally breaks down, she apologizes for it.
She manages the house, the children, the appointments, the groceries, the social calendar, the emotional temperature of everyone around her, working a full-time job, caring for aging parents, holding everything together. She is the glue. And when she finally breaks down, she apologizes for it.
She holds everything together. But who holds her?
The Expectation to Be Everything
Women are diagnosed with depression and anxiety disorders at approximately twice the rate of men. Moreover, they are more likely to internalize their distress, to ruminate, and to blame themselves. Women’s mental health is complicated by a relentless expectation that they should be fine, giving endlessly, cheerfully, selflessly, without cost to themselves.
The Invisible Labour
Invisible labour refers to the unpaid, unacknowledged, emotionally exhausting work of managing a household, a family, and the emotional lives of everyone around you. Research consistently shows this falls disproportionately on women, even when both partners work full time. As a result, the chronic stress creates anxiety, burnout, depression, and a pervasive sense of being alone even when surrounded by people who love you.
The Biology Nobody Talks About
Women’s mental health is profoundly shaped by biology. Hormonal fluctuations during the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, the postpartum period, and menopause have documented effects on mood, cognition, sleep, and emotional regulation.
Postpartum depression affects approximately one in seven new mothers. Premenstrual dysphoric disorder impacts millions of women every month. And yet: ‘It’s just hormones.’ ‘Every woman goes through this.’ ‘You’ll be fine.’ These dismissals are not just unhelpful, they are dangerous.
Gratitude is beautiful. Nevertheless, gratitude does not negate exhaustion. Love does not negate being overwhelmed. Having a wonderful family does not mean you cannot also be drowning.
Part Four: Men vs. Women, Same Storm, Different Ships
Depression and anxiety look different across genders, which is exactly why they go undiagnosed.
Irritability and anger
Substance use and workaholism
Recklessness and withdrawal
Control-seeking and perfectionism
Sadness, tearfulness, fatigue
Rumination and self-blame
Loss of appetite, sleep disruption
Withdrawal from relationships
Why the Gap Goes Undiagnosed
Consequently, when men’s presentations don’t match our script for ‘what depression looks like,’ clinicians miss them, and the man in the middle of it frequently has no idea that what he is experiencing has a name. Neither form is better or worse. Both deserve compassionate, appropriate care.
Therefore, we need a new script: one that gives everyone permission to be a full human being, distributes labour equitably, and makes it safe for anyone to say: I am struggling. I need help.
Part Five: What Needs to Change
Change must happen at every level: our systems, our communities, and within ourselves.
Change begins the moment someone decides to reach out, and someone else decides to truly listen.
In Our Systems
Above all, mental healthcare must be treated with the same urgency and respect as physical healthcare. There is no justification for a world where a person with a broken leg receives care within hours, yet a person in a mental health crisis waits months. Consequently, governments must increase investment substantially, and healthcare providers need training to identify all presentations of mental illness, including the atypical, masculinized forms currently going undetected at scale.
In Our Communities
Stigma will not be dismantled by governments alone. People in families, workplaces, and faith communities must decide it is no longer acceptable to shame people for struggling. That means retiring phrases like ‘man up’ and ‘you’re being dramatic’, replacing them with: ‘I hear you.’ ‘That sounds really hard.’ ‘You don’t have to handle this alone.’
Furthermore, children need to be taught emotional literacy: how to identify what they feel, how to express it safely, and how to ask for help. Communities must look out for each other without waiting to be asked. Noticing when someone has gone quiet. Sending a message simply because you are thinking of them.
In Ourselves
Ask yourself, honestly, once a day: How am I actually doing? Not the version you perform for others: the actual, real interior experience you carry through every moment of every day.
Give yourself permission to answer truthfully. If the answer is: I am not okay, and especially if the answer is that, then take one step. Just one.
Part Six: Healing from the Inside Out: Wellness as Mental Medicine
Recovery from mental illness is not a single prescription, it is a whole-life practice.
At Belldiva, we believe that the body and the mind are inseparable, and that the daily rituals we build around our physical health profoundly shape our mental and emotional wellbeing. Therapy and medication are powerful, proven tools, and so are these.
Recovery is not a single event. It is a daily practice built from small, consistent acts of self-care.
Six Daily Practices That Make a Real Difference
Part Seven: Mental Health in Business and Leadership
A company is only as strong as the mental health of the people who build it.
Right now, the people building the world’s companies are quietly breaking.
lost per year in global productivity to burnout
return on every dollar invested in workplace mental health
founders experience depression vs. the general population
The Hidden Cost of Leadership Silence
The message sent to leaders mirrors the message sent to men for generations: be strong. Do not let them see you struggle. The cost is identical: people suffering in silence at the very top, making decisions that affect thousands of lives, while carrying weights that nobody around them knows about.
What Genuine Investment Looks Like
Genuine mental health investment looks like leaders who model vulnerability by talking honestly about their own struggles, including workloads that human beings can actually sustain, paid mental health days, access to therapy as a standard benefit, and performance cultures that measure sustainable output, not hours worked. Moreover, it means managers who ask ‘how are you actually doing?’ and genuinely mean it.
The most powerful thing a leader can do for their organization’s mental health
is to take care of their own.
Everything flows from the top. Model the courage. Give others permission to do the same.
Part Eight: If You Are Struggling Right Now
This section is written directly to you.
Perhaps you have been reading and feeling something loosen inside, recognizing yourself in a paragraph, a sentence, or a single word. Or perhaps you are simply tired of carrying this alone. Either way, this section is for you.
You are not alone.
What you are going through is real, valid, and not your fault.
And it does not have to be permanent.
Recovery Is Real, and It Can Be Your Story
Mental illness is not a life sentence. With the right support, people recover. They find their way back to themselves, discover capacities they never knew they had, and build lives that feel genuinely worth living, not because the struggle disappears entirely, but because they learn to carry it differently, with more tools, more support, and more self-compassion. That can be your story.
What Getting Help Actually Looks Like
There is no single path: therapy works for some, medication for others, and a combination for many. In addition, peer support, daily wellness habits, and community all matter significantly. The most important thing, therefore, is to start somewhere. Anywhere. Because the cost of waiting is too high.
Start with your family doctor and tell them honestly what you are experiencing. Should they not listen, find another one. Anyone in immediate distress can reach out to a crisis line. You do not have to be ‘in crisis enough.’ Struggling is reason enough. You belong there.
Resources: You Do Not Have to Figure This Out Alone
A Final Word
‘The bravest thing I ever did was continuing my life when I wanted to die.’, Juliette Lewis
You do not have to carry this alone. You never did.
Something Is Shifting
We are at a crossroads. The crisis is real and worsening. As a result, the systems we have built to address it remain inadequate. Cultural norms that keep people silent cost lives, every single day, every single hour, every forty seconds.
However, something is also shifting. Conversations are opening up. Men are saying ‘I am not okay’ out loud. Women are refusing to apologize for needing support. Leaders are modelling vulnerability, and young people are asking for help with a directness that is nothing short of revolutionary.
At Belldiva, we believe that true wellness is whole, the skin you are in and the mind behind it, the body you nourish and the heart you protect. Above all, the life you build from the inside out matters most, because wealth without wellness is hollow, beauty without wellbeing is surface, and a life that looks good on the outside while suffering on the inside is not the life any of us deserve.
You deserve better.
All of you.
Talk to someone. Start today.
You are not alone. You never were.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. If you are in immediate danger, please call your local emergency number.
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